Tesla has officially switched on its first Supercharger stations in Colombia, with locations now open in both Bogotá and Medellín. The launch marks Tesla's entry into the Colombian charging infrastructure market, following vehicle sales that began in November 2025 and first deliveries in late January 2026.

The Bogotá station is located at Andino Shopping Mall (Cra. 11 #82-71) with 4 stalls, while Medellín's station at Unicentro Shopping Mall (Cra 66B #34A-76) offers 8 stalls. Both sites deliver up to 325 kW of peak charging power and operate 24/7. Pricing is set at 1,300 Colombian Pesos (COP) per kWh, with standard Tesla congestion fees applying once a session ends or the battery reaches 80% — a five-minute grace period is included before fees kick in.

Supercharger Voting is also now live for Colombia, letting owners nominate and vote for the next wave of locations. Bogotá was itself a winner from the Q1 2026 voting round, so the system has already proven it works in-market. Colombia's energy regulator (Creg) is separately expected to publish its EV charging infrastructure roadmap by June 2026, which could accelerate the broader rollout further.
For Colombian Tesla owners, the network is small but the foundation is solid — two major cities covered, fast hardware in place, and a community-driven expansion mechanism already running. The next expansion sites will depend on how owners vote in the coming cycles.

Marcus covers Tesla's software releases, FSD rollouts, and OTA changes. Background in automotive engineering. Based in Austin.
Sources verified at publish time. Spotted an inaccuracy? Email editorial@basenor.com.







